Per-Application Volume in Vista

I’ve been using Vista now for a week and I don’t think I’m going back.

3D-Flip is amazing. I can page through quarter-scale screenshots of the 20 or so app windows I have open to find the right one. The fact that they are live, active windows, not just screenshots is gravy. Please turn this into a screensaver.

Pin to Start Menu lets you right click on an app and add immediately add it to app list that comes up when you hit the start button. I used to have to drag shortcuts around to do that in XP. They should add Pin to Send To Menu.

Glass is really cool. Titlebars and window outlines are translucent(you choose the color, shade and alpha level). It’s not useful, but it gives you apps a feeling of … um … realness.

My new favorite, though, is per-application volume. I had no idea about this feature until Scoble mentioned it today. WOWOWOWOWOW! I guess NOW I don’t have to turn off email and IM notifications and system sounds if I want to turn up the music. Nice touch.

Anyway, that’s why I read his blog and ask him questions. He knows which features of which products are special. Maybe that makes him an evangelist and maybe it just makes him awesome.

Like this:

LikeLoading...

Related

7 responses to “Per-Application Volume in Vista”

“Pin to Start Menu lets you right click on an app and add immediately add it to app list that comes up when you hit the start button. I used to have to drag shortcuts around to do that in XP. They should add Pin to Send To Menu.”

You can do the same in Windows XP too. Right click on a shortcut or a app, and you will see “Pin to start menu” in the context menu.

If you still have Windows XP on one of your boxes, I recommend you try IndieVolume – per-application volume control for Windows XP/2000/NT/Me. In addition to all Windows Vista volume control features, IndieVolume also implements per-application playback device control, per-application balance control, and per-application DirectX effects that Windows Vista does not have.

Anando, thanks for the info about pin to start menu being an XP feature. I never realized that and now I’m using it all the time on my XP boxes. It’s funny that I thought it was a Vista feature. I guess I’m more in explore mode when I’m using a new OS.